Katie Kitamura's 'Audition' is a puzzle, but she says it's not meant to be solved - podcast episode cover

Katie Kitamura's 'Audition' is a puzzle, but she says it's not meant to be solved

Apr 29, 20259 min
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Episode description

In a Manhattan restaurant, the narrator of Audition meets a young man for lunch. Everyone has a different understanding of the pair's relationship, including the narrator herself. Katie Kitamura says she got the idea for the story after coming across a headline that said, "a stranger told me he was my son." That headline turned into the premise for her latest novel, which experiments with the idea of contradictions to destabilizing effect. In today's episode, Kitamura joins NPR's Ari Shapiro for a conversation about her decision to cut the book in half. They also discuss other media that's split into two parts – like the films Vertigo and Shoplifters – and Shapiro shares his interpretation of the novel.

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Katie Kitamura's 'Audition' is a puzzle, but she says it's not meant to be solved | NPR's Book of the Day podcast - Listen or read transcript on Metacast